Kindergarten Cop is CANCELED: Arnold Schwarzenegger's 1990 comedy is pulled from film festival for 'romanticizing over-policing children' and is compared to Birth Of A Nation

  • Kindergarten Cop was pulled from drive-in festival in Portland this week
  • Critics denounced it as 'celebrating the school-to-prison pipeline'
  • Compared the 1990 comedy to the explicitly racist 1915 film Birth Of A Nation
  • In place of Kindergarten Cop, a film celebrating late Rep. John Lewis will air

The comedy film Kindergarten Cop has been pulled from a film festival after protesters claimed it glorifies police traumatizing children and compared it to the explicitly racist 1915 silent movie Birth Of A Nation. 

Organizers of the NW Film Center in Portland, Oregon announced this week that the 1990 Arnold Schwarzenegger comedy would be pulled from the lineup and replaced with a documentary celebrating the late Rep. John Lewis.

Kindergarten Cop, which was filmed in Astoria, Oregon, had originally been selected for the festival for its importance to the state's history in film making, and to honor its 30th anniversary, according to Willamette Week.

However, anti-police critics led by local author Lois Leveen said the PG-13 movie promoted a 'school-to-prison pipeline' and 'romanticizes over-policing'. 

The 1990 comedy film Kindergarten Cop (above) has been pulled from a film festival after protesters claimed it glorifies police traumatizing children
The 1990 comedy film Kindergarten Cop (above) has been pulled from a film festival after protesters claimed it glorifies police traumatizing children

The 1990 comedy film Kindergarten Cop (above) has been pulled from a film festival after protesters claimed it glorifies police traumatizing children

'Yes, KINDERGARTEN COP is only a movie. So are BIRTH OF A NATION and GONE WITH THE WIND, but we recognize films like those are not “good family fun,"' Leveen said in a tweet.

'They are relics of how pop culture feeds racist assumptions,' the author added.

'There’s nothing entertaining about the presence of police in schools, which feeds the “school-to-prison” pipeline in which African American, Latinx, and other kids of color are criminalized rather than educated,' Leveen said in another tweet.

Kindergarten Cop portrays a police officer, portrayed by Schwarzenegger, going undercover as a kindergarten teacher in order to catch a drug dealer who is targeting his own ex-wife and son.

The main character, who has no teaching experience, is shown struggling with classroom management before finding a passion for education and considering changing his career entirely.

Anti-police critics led by local author Lois Leveen (above) said the PG-13 movie promoted a 'school-to-prison pipeline' and 'romanticizes over-policing'

Anti-police critics led by local author Lois Leveen (above) said the PG-13 movie promoted a 'school-to-prison pipeline' and 'romanticizes over-policing'

Protesters compared Kindergarten Cop to the explicitly racist silent film Birth Of A Nation (above) which glorified the Ku Klux Klan and portrayed most black characters with blackface

Protesters compared Kindergarten Cop to the explicitly racist silent film Birth Of A Nation (above) which glorified the Ku Klux Klan and portrayed most black characters with blackface

The decision to pull Kindergarten Cop from the festival lineup was met with skepticism from some quarters.

'Nutty. Angry leftists hate Hollywood. Anyone who disagrees will be censored,' tweeted Senator Ted Cruz, a Texas Republican, in response to the controversy. 

'Hollywood, afraid of the mob, will keep funding those trying to erase any speech/movies that don’t conform,' Cruz wrote.

'Kindergarten Cop and Birth of a Nation are "both problematic movies" in the same sense that my kids and Vincent van Gogh are "both painters,"' tweeted one person. 

The film had been slated to kick off Portland's Northwest Film Center's Cinema Unbound Drive-in Theater on August 6.

It has been replaced by a second showing of John Lewis: Good Trouble, a documentary about the recently deceased congressman and civil rights leader. 

Other films slated to run at the festival include Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Creature From The Black Lagoon, Xanadu, Pee Wee's Big Adventure, and The Shining.

In recent months, protests have led to the cancellation of several police-themed television shows, including the long-running Cops and wildly popular Live PD.

In June, the epic movie Gone With The Wind was temporarily removed from streaming service HBO Max over concerns that it painted slavery in a sentimental light. 

The movie returned to the streaming platform several weeks later with an added video disclaimer that states the film 'denies the horrors of slavery'.  

It now opens with a four-minute introduction discussing the movie's depiction of race in the Civil War era and 'why this 1939 epic drama should be viewed in its original form, contextualized, and discussed'. 

The film 'presents the antebellum South as a world of grace and beauty without acknowledging the brutality of chattel slavery upon which this world was based', TCM host and film scholar Jacqueline Stewart says in the introduction.

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